The Wolf Pack baseball team has added two pitchers – one a power guy and the other a self-proclaimed command guy – to its already huge list of committed prospects.

Robert Anderson, a 6-foot-5, 235-pound junior-college transfer, and 6-0, 185-pound Charlie Brooks, one of the most productive prep pitchers in Southern California, have given verbal commitments to Nevada.

Brooks, from Buena High in Ventura, Calif., has pitched at the varsity level since his freshman season and compiled an 8-6 record, 1.70 ERA and 119 strikeouts in 111.1 innings. As a junior last season, he was 2-2 in seven starts, with a 1.43 ERA and 55 strikeouts in 44 innings.

Brooks said he throws a four-seam and two-seam fastball in the low-90s, to go with a curveball and changeup. His best pitch is the curveball and his favorite to throw is the changeup.

“I would say I’m more of a command guy,” Brooks said. “I try to hit location a lot.”

Anderson, meanwhile, said he “likes to dominate with my fastball,” which hits 93 miles per hour. The West Valley College product in Saratoga, Calif., was the team’s closer in 2011, posting a 2.92 ERA with 29 strikeouts over 37 innings. He missed the 2012 season with a broken right pitching hand.

Anderson, who also played basketball in junior college before turning his focus to baseball, said he learned a great deal by being forced to sit out last season.

“Mentally, I have changed a little,” Anderson said. “I had a year to kind of step back and learn how the game was played. Coming in as a true freshman, a power arm, I tried to strike everybody out and now I’m more of a student of the game.”

Anderson and Brooks are the 13th and 14th commitments in the Wolf Pack’s 2014 recruiting class for first-year coach Jay Johnson, who also has two class of 2015 pledges. Verbal commitments are not binding, but recruits can sign their national letters-of-intent starting Nov. 13.

Johnson had been recruiting Brooks for two years and a visit to Reno last weekend sealed the deal.

“The campus was beautiful,” Brooks said. “Everybody was so nice. It’s kind of like a home away from home because it felt so easy to ask people questions and talk to anybody and they wouldn’t bat an eye about talking to you. It was a very inviting place.”